Our Savior stooped to the lowest depths of degradation, he shall be
exalted to the topmost heights of glory. "Being found in fashion as a man,
he humbled himself and became obedient unto death, even the death of the
cross; wherefore God also has highly exalted him, and given him a name
which is above every name." Our Lord was trampled beneath the feet of
all, but the day comes when all things shall be trampled beneath his feet.
By so much as he descended, by so much shall he ascend; by the greatness
of his sufferings may we judge of the unspeakable grandeur of his glory.
Already sin lies beneath his feet, and Satan, like the old dragon bound, is
there also. The systems of idolatry, which were paramount in the days of
his flesh, he has broken as with a rod of iron. Where are the gods of Rome
and Greece? Where are Jupiter, Diana, and Mercury? Let the moles and the
bats reply. The colossal systems of idolatry which still dominate over the
minds of men must yet come down; the truth as it is in Jesus must before long
prevail over those ancient dynasties of error, for Jesus our Lord must reign
from the river even unto the ends of the earth! In these last times, when sin
in all its forms and Satan with all his craft shall be subdued, then death
itself also, the unconquerable death, the insatiable devourer of the human
race, who has swept them away as grass before the mower's scythe- then
shall death who has feared the face of none, but has laid armies prostrate in
his wrath, be utterly destroyed. He who is immortality and life shall bring
death of death and destruction to the grave, and unto him shall be songs of
everlasting praise. Contemplate the glory of your Master, then, believer.
From the base of the pyramid, deep in darkness, he rises to the summit,
which is high in glory; from the depths of the abyss of woe he leaps to the
tops of the mountain of joy. Anticipate his triumph by faith, for you shall
partake in it; so surely as you share in his abasement, you shall also partake
in his glory, and the more you shall become conformable unto him in his
sufferings, the more may you rest assured that you shall be partakers with
him in the glory which is to be revealed.
Come we now to the text itself. The text teaches us that death itself is at
the last to be vanquished by Christ, no, it is to be utterly destroyed by him,
so that it shall cease to be. In handling the text, there are four things, which
at once strike you. Here is death an enemy; but, secondly, he is the last
enemy; and, thirdly, he is an enemy to be destroyed; but, fourthly, he is
the last enemy that shall be destroyed.
I. First, then, you have in our banquet of this morning, as your
first course, BITTER HERBS, wormwood mingled with gall; for you
have DEATH AN ENEMY.
It is not difficult to perceive in what respects death is an enemy.
Consider him apart from the resurrection, apart from the glorious
promises, which spring up like sweet flowers sown by celestial hands upon
the black soil of the tomb, and death is preeminently an enemy. Death is an
enemy because it is always repugnant to the nature of living creatures to
die. Flesh and blood cannot love death. God has wisely made self-
preservation one of the first laws of our nature; it is an attribute of a living
man to desire to prolong his life. "Skin for skin, yes, all that a man has
will he give for his life;" it is our dearest heritage. To throw away life with
the suicide is a crime, and to waste life in folly is no mean sin. We are
bound to prize life. We must do so: it is one of the instincts of our
humanity, and he were not greater but less than man who did not care to
live. Death must always, then, by creatures that breathe, be looked upon as
a foe.
Death may well be counted as a foe, because it entered into the world and
became the master over the race of Adam through our worst enemy, namely,
sin. It came not in accordance to the course of nature, but according to the
course of evil. Death came not in by the door, but it climbed up some other
way, and we may therefore rest assured that it is a thief and a robber. It
was not in the natural constitution of humanity that man should die, for the
first man, Adam, was made a living soul. Eminent physiologists have said
that they do not detect in the human system any particular reason why man
should die at fourscore years. The same wheels which have gone on for
twenty, thirty, forty years might have continued their revolutions for a
hundred years, or even for centuries, so far as their own self-renewing
power is concerned.
There is no reason in man's body itself why it should
inevitably return to the dust from which it was taken; or if there be now
such a reason, it may be traceable to the disease which sin has brought into
our constitution; but, as originally formed, man might have been immortal-
he would have been immortal. In that garden, if the leaves had faded, he
would not, and if the animals had died (and I suppose they would, for they
certainly did die before Adam came into the world), yet there is no need
that Adam should have died: he could have renewed his youth like the
eagle and remained immortal amidst mortality, a king and priest forever, if
God had so chosen it should be; instead of which, through sin, though he
be even now a priest, he must, like Aaron, go up to the top of the hill and
put off his priestly garments and breathe out his life. Sin brought in death,
and nothing that came in by sin can be man's friend. Death, the child of
Sin, is the foe of man.
That the truth before us is most sure, some people know by very bitter
experience, for it embitters their existence. To some men this is the one
drop of gall which has made their life bitter to them.
The thought that they should die shades them with raven wings. By the
fear of death they are all their lifetime subject to bondage. Like Uriah, the
Hittite, they carry in their bosom the message, which ordains their death;
but, unlike him, they know that it contains the fatal mandate. Like cloth,
which feeds the moth, which devours it, their fears and forebodings feed
the fatal worm. When their cups are sweetest they remember the dregs of
death, and when their viands are the daintiest they think of the black
servitor who will clear away the feast. They can enjoy nothing, because the
darkness of death's shade lies across the landscape; the spirit of death
haunts them, the skeleton sits at their table; they are mournfully familiar
with the shroud, the coffin, and the sepulcher; but they are familiar with
these not as with friendly provisions for a good night's rest, but as the
cruel ensigns of a dreaded foe.
This makes death an enemy with emphasis,
when our fears enable him thus to spoil our life. When death rides his pale
horse, roughshod, over all terrestrial joys, he makes us feel that it is a poor
thing to live because the thread of life is so soon to be cut, a miserable
thing even to flourish, because we only flourish like the green herb, and,
like the green herb, are cut down and cast into the oven. Many others have
found death to be their foe, not so much because they themselves have
been depressed by the thought, but because the great enemy has made
fearful breaches in their daily comforts.
O you mourners! your somber
garments tell me that your family circle has been broken into, time after
time, by this ruthless destroyer. The widow has lost her comfort and her
stay; the children have been left desolate and fatherless. O death! you are
the cruel enemy of our hearths and homes. The youthful spirit has lost half
itself when the beloved one has been rent away, and men have seemed like
maimed souls when the best half of their hearts has been snatched from
them. Hope looked not forth at the window because the mourners went
about the streets.
Joy drank no more from her crystal cup, for the golden
bowl was broken, and the wheel was broken at the cistern, and all the
daughters of music were brought low. How often have the unseen arrows
of death afflicted our household, and smitten at our feet those whom we
least could spare. The green have been taken as well as the ripe: death has
cut down the father's hope and the mother's joy, and, worse than this, he
has pitilessly rent away from the house its strongest pillar and torn out of
the wall the corner stone. Death has no affections of compassion; his flinty
heart feels for none; he spares neither young nor old. Tears cannot keep
our friends for us, nor can our sighs and prayers reanimate their dust. He is
an enemy indeed, and the very thought of his cruel frauds upon our love
makes us weep.
He is an enemy to us in that he has taken away from us One who is dearer
to us than all others. Death has even made a prey of him who is immortality
and life. On yonder cross behold death's most dreadful work. Could it not
spare him? Were there not enough of us? Why should it smite our David,
who was worth ten thousand of us? Did it not suffice that we, the common
men who had been tainted by sin, should fall by a doom that was justly due
to our sin; but must the virgin-born, in whom there was no sin- the
immaculate Savior- must he die? Yes, death's vengeance was not satisfied
until out of his quiver had been drawn the fatal arrow which should pierce
the heart of the Son of God. Behold he dies!
Those eyes that wept over
Jerusalem are glazed in death's deepest darkness. Those hands that
scattered blessings, hang as inanimate clay by that bloodstained but lifeless
side. The body must be wrapped in spices and fine linen, and laid within the
silent tomb. Weep, heaven! mourn, earth! for your King is dead, the Prince
of life and glory is a prisoner in the tomb. Death, all-conquering tyrant,
you are an enemy indeed, for you have slain and led our dearest one into
your gloomy cell.
We may more fully perceive death's enmity in our own people. He is an
enemy to us because very soon he will bear us away from all our prized
possessions. "These things," said one, as he walked through fine gardens
and looked upon lawns, and parks, and mansions- "these things make it
hard to die." To leave the fair goods and gains of earth, and to return into
the womb of mother earth as naked as first we came forth from it; to have
the crown taken from the head, and the ermine from the shoulder, and to
be brought down to the same level as the poorest beggar that slept upon a
dunghill, is no small thing.
Dives must be unwrapped of his scarlet, and if he shall find a tomb he shall
be no more honored than Lazarus, though Lazarus should die unburied.
Death is an enemy to man, because though he may store up his goods and
build his barns and make them greater, yet it is death who says, "You
fool, this night shall your soul be required of you." Death makes wealth a
dream, it turns misers' gain to loss, and laughs a hoarse laugh at toiling
slaves who load themselves with yellow dust. When the rich man has made
his fortune, he wins six foot of earth and nothing more, and what less has
he who died a pauper.
Death is an enemy to Christians too because it carries them away from
choice society. We have often said,
"My willing soul would stay
In such a frame as this,"
We love the saints the people of God are our company, and with our
brethren we walk to his house, who are our familiar companions, and alas,
we are to be taken away from them; nor is this all, we are to be parted
from those who are nearer still: the wife of our bosom and the children of
our care. Yes, we must bid farewell to every loved one, and go our way to
the land from which no traveler returns, banished from the militant host of
God and from the happy homes of men. Death is an enemy because it
breaks up all our enjoyments.
No cheerful peals of Sabbath bells again for
us, no going up to the much-loved sanctuary where the holy hymn has
often borne us aloft as on eagle's wings, no more listening to the teachings
of the Christian ministry, when Boanerges has aroused us, and Barnabas has
consoled us, until the desert of our life has blossomed like a rose; no
minglings in communion around the Master's table, no more drinking of
the cup and eating of the bread which symbolizes the Master's sufferings,
at death's door we bid farewell to all Sabbath enjoyment and sanctuary
joys.
Oh you enemy, you do compel us to give a long, a last farewell to all
our employments. The earnest and successful minister must leave the flock,
perhaps to be scattered or torn by grievous wolves. Just when it seemed as
if his life was most necessary the leader falls, and like a band of freshly
enlisted young recruits who lose the warrior whose skill had led them on to
victory, they are scattered when he seemed necessary to make them one,
and lead them on to conquest. She who was training up her children in
God's fear sleeps in the grave when the children need her most, and he
who spoke for Christ, or who was a pillar in the house of God, who served
his day and generation- he too must fall asleep- no more to feed the hungry,
or to clothe the naked, or to teach the ignorant, or comfort the feeble-minded.
He is gone from the vineyard of the church that needed him to
trim the vines, and from the house of God which needed him as a wise
master-builder to edify it to perfection. Who but an enemy could have
taken him away at such a moment and from such engagements? He is gone
too, dear friends, from all the success of life, and herein has death been his
bitter enemy. He is gone from hearing the cries of penitent sinners, the true
success of God's ministers, gone from leading pilgrims to the cross, and
hearing their songs of joy. Great-heart has led many a caravan of pilgrims
to the Celestial City, but now he himself must cross the Jordan.
It little
avails him that he has fought with Giant Despair and brought him to his
knees, it benefits but little that he slew old Giant Grim, who would have
forced Christians and the children to go back: hero as he has been, the
floods must roll over his head; of that black and bitter stream he too must
drink, and that too, very probably when God had honored him most, and
favored him with the prospect of yet greater success. So, brethren and
sisters, it may be with you; when you are most diligent in business, most
fervent in spirit, and serving the Lord with the greatest joy, when your
sheaves are heavy and you are shouting the Harvest Home, it may be then
that this unwelcome enemy will hasten you from the field of your triumph
to leave to others the work you loved so well.
Nor is this all. This enemy is peculiarly so to us, because we are
accustomed to surround the thought of his coming with many pains, with
many infirmities, and above all, since the decay, corruption, and utter
dissolution of the body is in itself a most terrible thing, we are alarmed at
the prospect of it. The pains and groans and dying strife drive us back from
the grave's brink, and make us long to linger in our prison and our clay.
We fear to pass through the gate of iron because of the grim porters of
pain and sickness who sit before the gate. Certainly to some it is hard work
to die. While life is still vigorous it will not yield its dominion without a
struggle; in other cases where old age has gradually smoothed the pathway,
we have known many of our brethren and sisters sleep themselves into a
better land, and none could tell when they passed the mysterious line which
divides the realm of life from the domain of death.
It is not always that
death is escorted by bodily griefs, but so often does he come with clouds
and darkness round about him that men at the first glance conclude from
his hostile array that he is no friend of theirs. He is an enemy, no, the
enemy, the very worst enemy that our fears could conjure up, for we could
fight with Satan and overcome him, but who can overcome death? We can
master sin through the precious blood of Jesus, and can be more than a
conqueror over all our fear, but we must bow before the iron spectre of
this grim tyrant; to the dust we must descend, and amidst the tombs we all
must sleep (unless, indeed, unless the Lord should speedily come), for it is
appointed unto men once to die.
II. Having said enough upon this topic we shall now take away the dish of
bitter herbs, and bring forth a little salt while we speak upon the second
point, namely, that, though death be an enemy, IT IS THE LAST ENEMY.
I say salt, because it is not altogether sweet; there is a pungency as well as a
savor here. It is the last enemy- what if I say it is the dreaded reserve of the
army of hell. When Satan shall have brought up every other adversary, and
all these shall have been overcome through the blood of the Lamb, then the
last, the body-guard of hell, under the command of the King of Terrors, the
strongest, the fiercest, the most terrible of foes, shall assail us! It has been
the custom of some great commanders to keep a body of picked men in
reserve to make the final assault. Just when battalion after battalion have
been swept away, and the main army reels; just when the victory is almost
in the enemy's hands, the all but defeated commander pours his mightiest
legions upon the foe, uncovers all his batteries and makes one terrible and
final charge with the old guard that never has been beaten, and never can
surrender, and then perhaps at the last moment he snatches triumph from
between the foeman's teeth.
Ah, Christian, the last charge may be the worst you have ever known;
you may find in your last moments that you will have need of all
your strength, and more, you will be constrained to cry to the Strong
for strength, you will have to plead for heavenly reinforcements
to succor you in that last article. Let no man conclude himself at the
close of the war until he is within the pearly gate; for, if there be but
another five minutes to live, Satan will, if possible, avail himself of it.
The enemy may come in like a flood precisely at that flattering moment
when you hoped to dwell in the land Beulah, and to be lulled to rest by soft
strains from the celestial choirs. It is not always so, it is not often so, for,
"at eventide there shall be light" is usually the experience of the Christian;
but it is so sometimes; it has been notably so with those whose previous life
has been very peaceful; a calm day has ended with a stormy evening, and a
bright sun has set amid dark clouds. Some of those whose candle never
went out before have been put to bed in the dark. The soldiers of the cross
have been pursued by the foe up to the city walls, as if the Lord had said to
his soldier, "There are more laurels yet to win, behold I give you another
opportunity of glorifying my name among my militant people." Brethren, if
death be the last enemy, I do not think we have to fight with him now; we
have other enemies who claim our valor and our watchfulness today. We
need not be taken up with devising plans of present defense against an
enemy that does not yet assail us. The present business of life, the present
service of God and of his cause are our main concern, and in attending to
these we shall best, as Christians, be found prepared to die. To live well is
the way to die well. Death is not our first foe but the last; let us then fight
our adversaries in order, and overcome them each in its turn, hoping that
he who has been with us even until now will be with us until the end.
Notice, dear friends- for herein lies the savor of the thought- it is the last
enemy. Picture in your mind's eye our brave soldiers at the battle of
Waterloo; for many weary hours they had been face to face with the foe;
the fight had lasted so long and been so frequently renewed that they
seemed to have encountered successive armies, and to have fought a dozen
battles; charge after charge had they borne like walls of stone: imagine then
that the commander is able to announce that they have only to endure one
more onslaught of the foe. How cheerfully do the ranks close! How
gallantly are the squares formed! How firmly their feet are planted! "Now,"
say they, "let us stand like a wall of rock; let no man shrink for a moment,
for it is the last the enemy can do. He will do his worst; but soon he will be
able to do no more but sound to boot and saddle, and leave the field to us."
The last enemy! Soldiers of Christ, do not the words animate you?
Courage, Christian, courage; the tide must turn after this, it is the highest
wave that now dashes over you; courage, man, the night must close, you
have come to its darkest hour, the day star already dawns! Now that you
are dying you begin to live. The last enemy conquered! Does it not
bring tears to your eyes to think of bearing your last temptation? Little care
we who the foe may be, if he be but conquered and be but the last, for have
we not been perplexed with a succession of enemies? We have only
conquered one foe to find another waiting for us. Our path has been
hitherto from temptation to temptation, from trial to trial, from tribulation
to tribulation. We are growing weary, we cannot forever bear wave upon
wave, grief upon grief, and temptation upon temptation. Like the warrior
of old, our arm grows weary, but our hand (glory be to divine grace!)
cleaves to our sword; we are faint, yet pursuing; but what good news when
we shall hear that the present enemy is the last! Though it be death, we will
rejoice! O Christian, there will be no more poverty to tempt you to
murmur, no more losses and crosses to cast your spirit down, no more
inbred sins to mar your devotion, and to spoil the glory of your faith, no
outward temptation, no sinners with their trifling talk to vex your ear, no
blasphemies to torment your soul, no more aches and pains of body, no
more tortures and troubles of spirit! The dog of hell will be silenced for
ever, there will be no more Canaanites to drive out of the land, the race of
Amalek shall then be utterly destroyed. And where will you be? In the
land that flows with milk and honey, in the home of peace and the abode
of rapture
"Far from a world of grief and sin,
With God eternally shut in."
Well may you welcome death! Let him come in his chariot of fire, he bears
you to Elijah's God! Let him lay hold of the shield and buckler, and frown
upon you like a king of fierce speech and terrible countenance, he carries
you not into captivity, but delivers you out of bondage! At his coming your
sky may be darkened, the thunders may roll, and the solid pillars of your
house may be shaken, but it is the last commotion, and is therefore the
token of everlasting rest. Having overcome death, peace is proclaimed, the
sword is sheathed, the banners furled, and you are forever more than a
conqueror through him that loved you.
III. Having come so far, we may now proceed another step. Death is an
enemy, the last enemy- HE IS AN ENEMY TO BE DESTROYED.
Here I take away the salt and bring the milk and honey, for surely here is
much of exquisite sweetness and of true spiritual food to the child of God.
Death is the last enemy to be destroyed. The destruction of death will be
perfectly achieved at the resurrection, for then death's castle, the tomb, will
be demolished, and not so much as one stone left upon another. All death's
captives must go free; not a bone of the saints shall be kept as a trophy by
the arch foe; not so much as a particle of their dust shall he be able to show
as a spoil which he has been able to preserve. He must disgorge the whole
that he has fed upon; he must pay back all that he has stolen; the prey shall
be taken from the mighty, and the lawful captive shall be delivered.
From the land and from the sea, those that were lately dead, and those that
centuries ago had moldered into dust shall rise. The quickening trumpet
shall achieve a work as great as the creation. The voice of God which said,
"Let there be light" and there was light, shall say, "Let there be life," and
there shall be life; and, as in the valley of vision, bone shall come to bone,
and the flesh shall come upon them, and life shall come into them, and they
shall live. The same bodies shall arise, the same for identity, but not the
same for quality! The same, but oh, how changed! They were the shriveled
seed when death sowed them in the earth, they shall be the fully developed
flower when resurrection's springtime shall bid them blossom from the
dust. They were battered and time-worn when he dragged them to his den;
they shall come forth with the dew of their youth upon them when Christ
shall give them life.
Oh, the sweet gains of death! "It is sown in corruption, it is raised in
incorruption." Oh the interest, which we shall win from that arch usurer
who thought to claim both principal and interest! "It is sown in weakness,
it is raised in power;" it is sown a natural body, it is raised a heavenly and
spiritual body. O death! you are no gainer by us, but we shall be mighty
gainers by you, for though this poor body shall become worms food, and
through and through and through this mortal frame, decay shall drive its
tunnels and make its solemn ways; though back to dust, eye and arm and
hand and brain must moulder, yet not lost, nor in any degree injured, shall
the whole fabric be; but as it were filtered, purified by the grave, the fair
body shall emerge again! The grave shall be to the believer's body as the
bath of spices in which Esther bathed herself to make herself ready to
behold the great King. Corruption, earth, and worms do but refine this
flesh, and make it pure according to God's will, until we shall put it on
afresh at his bidding.
We throw aside a workday dress, all torn, and crumpled and dusty;
we are glad to put it off, glad that evening time has come, and
that it is time to undress; but when we awake, we shall find instead
of that worn-out vesture, a noble change of raiment. The same
dress will be there, but marvelously changed- the great Fuller shall have
exercised his art upon it, and made it like the array which Moses and Elijah
wore on Tabor. How precious will our royal robes be, how bedecked with
pearls, how stiff with threads of gold, and studs of silver, how fitted for
God's priests and kings, how befit for those who shall enter the pearly
gates, and tread the golden streets of the heavenly Jerusalem, how proper
for those that shall walk in the golden light of the city that has foundations,
whose maker and builder is God! Death is thus to be destroyed by the
resurrection of the body, when our Lord shall descend from heaven with a
shout a resurrection which shall prove to assembled worlds, that to those
who are in Christ Jesus, "to die is gain."
But, dear friends, although this is a great truth with regard to the future, I
desire just to conduct your minds for a few minutes over the road by which
Christ has, in effect, virtually destroyed death already. In the first place, he
has taken away the shame of death. It was once a shameful thing to die. A
man might hold his head low in the presence of angels who could not die,
for he might remember with shame that he is the brother of the worm and
corruption is his sister. But now we can talk of death in the presence of
archangels and not be ashamed, for Jesus died. It is henceforth no
degradation to man to die, to sleep in the bed where Christ reposed- it is an
honor, and angels may almost regret that they have not the ability in this
respect to be made like unto the angels' Lord. Oh, Christian, you need not
speak of death with bated breath, but rather rejoice that you have
fellowship with Jesus in his tomb, and shall have fellowship with him as one
of the children of the resurrection.
Christ has, moreover, taken away the sting of death. The sting of death lay
in this- that we had sinned and were summoned to appear before the God
whom we had offended. This is the sting of death to you, unconverted
ones, not that you are dying, but that after death is the judgment, and that
you must stand before the Judge of quick and dead to receive a sentence
for the sins which you have committed in your body against him. This
makes it death to die; this hangs the dying bed with black curtains, and puts
out the light of the sick chamber: the second death makes death to be death
indeed; but
"If sin be pardoned I'm secure,
Death has no sting beside;
The law gave sin its damning power,
But Christ, my ransom, died."
Christmas Evans represents the monster death as being so intent to destroy
our Lord, that it drove the dart in its tail right through the Savior, until it
stuck in the cross on the other side, and the monster has never been able to
draw it out again. Christ on the cross took away the sting of death, so that
death has no further power to hurt the Christian. "The sting of death is sin,
and the strength of sin is the law, but thanks be unto God which gives us
the victory through our Lord Jesus Christ."
Our divine Lord has taken away from sin its slavery. The bondage of death
arises from man's fearing to die. Death has fitted fetters upon many a
man's wrist, and fixed an iron collar on his neck, and driven him with his
whip about the world, but Jesus has taken away the yoke of death from the
necks of his disciples. The Christian is not afraid to die; he looks forward
to it sometimes with composure and frequently even with expectation.
Hundreds of saints have been able to speak of dying as though it were but
every-day work, and there have been hundreds more who have looked
forward to their last day with as much delight as the bride hopes for the
wedding. Was not our song, which we sung just now a truthful one?
"Sweet truth to me!
I shall arise,
And with these eyes
My Savior see."
It was to some of us at any rate, and we are still desirous to sing it, longing
for that time when death shall come, and we shall enter into the joy of our
Lord.
Moreover, Christ has abolished death by removing its greatest sorrows. I
told you that death snatched us away from the society of those we loved on
earth; it is true, but it introduces us into nobler society far. We leave the
imperfect church on earth, but we claim membership with the perfect
church in heaven. The church militant must know us no more, but of the
church triumphant we shall be happy members. We may not now see the
honored men on earth who now serve Christ in the ministry, but we shall
see Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob, the noble army of martyrs, the goodly
fellowship of the prophets, and the glorious company of the apostles. We
shall be no losers, certainly, in the matter of society, but great gainers when
we are introduced to the general assembly and the church of the first-born,
whose names are written in heaven. I said that we should be taken away
from enjoyments. I spoke of Sabbath bells that would ring no longer, of
communion tables at which we could not sit, and songs of holy mirth in
which we could not join- ah! it is small loss compared with the gain
unspeakable, for we shall hear the bells of heaven ring out an unending
Sabbath, we shall join the songs that never have a pause, and which know
no discord; we shall sit at the banqueting table where the King himself is
present, where the symbols and the signs have vanished because the guests
have found the substance, and the King eternal and immortal is visibly in
their presence. Beloved, we leave the desert to lie down in green pastures;
we leave the scanty rills to bathe in the bottomless river of joy, we leave
the wells of Elim for the land which flows with milk and honey. Did I
speak of leaving possessions? What are the possessions? Moth-eaten
garments, cankered gold and silver, things that rust consume and that
thieves destroy. But we go to the land where nothing corrupts or
decays, where flowers fade not, and riches take not to themselves wings
to fly away. Loss! let the word be banished! Death gives us infinitely more
than he takes away! I spoke of death as an enemy because he took us from
sacred employments. It is so, but does he not usher us into nobler
employments far? To stand before that throne upon the sea of glass
mingled with fire, to bow within the presence chamber of the King of
kings, gazing into the glory that excels, and to see the King in his
beauty, the man that once was slain, wearing many crowns and arrayed in
the vesture of his glory, his wounds like sparkling jewels still visible above!
Oh! to cast our crowns at his feet, to lie there and shrink into nothing before
the Eternal All, to fly into Jesus' bosom, to behold the beauty of his love,
and to taste the kisses of his mouth, to be in Paradise, swallowed up in
unutterable joy because taken into the closest, fullest, nearest communion
with himself! Would not your soul burst from the body even now to obtain
this rapture? Cannot you say
"I'd part with all the joys of sense
To gaze upon your throne,
Pleasure springs fresh forever thence,
Unspeakable, unknown."
If death does but give us a sight of Jesus and make it our employment for
ever to sing his praise, and forever to learn his character, forever more lie
in his bosom, then let him come when he wills, we will scarcely call you
enemy again! An enemy destroyed in this case becomes a friend. The sting
is taken away from you, you hornet, and you become a bee to gather
sweet honey for us. The lion is slain, and like Samson we go forth to gather
handfuls of sweetness.
I shall not tarry longer, though greatly tempted, except to say this one
thing more, the fear of death which arises from the prospect of pain and
grief is also taken away by Christ when he reminds us that he will be with
us in our last moments; he will make the dying bed feel soft, and in the
midst of the river he will say, "Fear not, I am with you." So that in all
respects death is to be destroyed.
IV. Time warns us to clear the tables and send home the guests, with the
fourth consideration, THAT DEATH IS THE LAST ENEMY THAT WILL BE
DESTROYED.
Do not, therefore, give yourself so much concern if you do not feel
death to be destroyed in you at present. Supposing that it does
cause you pain and fear, remember that dying grace would be of no value
to you in living moments. Expect that if your faith is not faith enough to
die with, yet if it he faith as a grain of mustard seed it will grow; and,
growing, it will in a more developed state enable you to die triumphantly
when dying time comes. When I looked at the Book of Martyrs and
noticed the fearful pictures of saints in their dying agonies, I asked myself,
"Could I bear all that for Christ?" and I was compelled to say, "No, I know
I could not as I now am." But suppose I were called to martyrdom should I
bear it? and I thought I could say without presumption I could, for Christ
would give me grace when grace was needed. Now, death is to be
destroyed, but not until the last. You have many enemies who are not
destroyed, yet you have inbred sins unslain. Look well to them. Until they
are all gone you must not expect death to be destroyed, for he is the last to
die. So then, friend, let me whisper in your ear, expect to lose your dear
ones still, for death is not destroyed. Look not upon any of your friends as
though they would be with you tomorrow, for death is not destroyed yet.
See you the word "mortal" written upon all our brows. The most unlikely
ones die first. When I heard during this week of several cases of dear
friends who have gone to their reward, I could have sooner believed it had
been others, but God has been pleased to take from us and from our
connection many whom we supposed to be what are called good lives, and
they were good lives in the best sense, and that is why the Master took
them; they were ripe, and he took them home; but we could not see that.
Now, remember that all your friends, your wife, your husband, your child,
your kinsfolk, are all mortal. That makes you sad. Well, it may prevent
your being more sad when they are taken away. Hold them with a loose
hand; do not count that to be freehold which you have only received as a
leasehold; do not call that yours which is only lent you, for if you get a
thing lent you and it is asked for back, you give it back freely; but if you
entertain the notion that it was given you, you do not like to yield it up.
Now, remember, the enemy is not yet destroyed, and that he will make
inroads into our family circle still.
And then remember that you too must die. Bring yourself frequently
face to face with this truth, that you must die. Do not forget it,
Christian friend. No man knows whether his faith is good for anything
or not if he does not frequently try that faith by bringing himself
right to the edge of the grave. Picture yourself dying, conceive yourself
breathing out your last breath, and see whether then you can look at death
without quaking, whether you can feel, "Yes, I have rested upon Jesus, I
am saved, I will go through death's tremendous vale with his presence as
my stay, fearing no evil." If you have no good hope, may God give you
grace at this moment to fly to Jesus, and to trust in him, and when you
have trusted in him death will be to you a destroyed enemy. May God
grant his blessing for Jesus' sake. Amen.